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Carbon dioxide found on extrasolar planet

This Hubble Space Telescope discovery marks an important step along the trail of finding the chemical biotracers of extraterrestrial life as we know it.Provided by STScI, Baltimore, Maryland

Published: Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Artist's concept of the star Fomalhaut and the Jupiter-type planet that the Hubble Space Telescope observed.

December 9, 2008The Jupiter-sized planet, called HD 189733b, is too hot for life, but the Hubble observations are a demonstration that the basic chemistry for life can be measured on planets orbiting other stars. Organic compounds can also be by-products of life processes. Their detection on an earthlike planet may someday provide the first evidence of life beyond Earth.

Previous Hubble and the Spitzer Space Telescope observations of HD 189733b found water vapor. Earlier this year, Hubble astronomers reported that they found methane in the planet's atmosphere.

"This is exciting because Hubble is allowing us to see molecules that probe the conditions, chemistry, and composition of atmospheres on other planets," said team leader Mark Swain of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. "Thanks to Hubble we're entering an era where we are rapidly going to expand the number of molecules we know about on other planets."

Swain used Hubble's Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) to study infrared light emitted from the planet, which lies 63 light-years away. Gases in the planet's atmosphere absorb certain wavelengths of light from the planet's hot glowing interior. Swain identified not only carbon dioxide, but also carbon monoxide. The molecules leave their own unique spectral fingerprint on the radiation from the planet that reaches Earth. This is the first time a near-infrared emission spectrum has been obtained for an exoplanet.

"The carbon dioxide is the main focus of the excitement, because that is a molecule that under the right circumstances could have a connection to biological activity as it does on Earth," Swain said. "The very fact that we're able to detect it, and estimate its abundance, is significant for the long-term effort of characterizing planets both to find out what they're made of and to find out if they could be a possible host for life."

This type of observation is best done for planets with orbits tilted edge-on to Earth. They routinely pass in front of and then behind their parent stars, a phenomenon known as an eclipse. The planet HD 189733b passes behind its companion star once every 2.2 days. This allows an opportunity to subtract the light of the star alone (when the planet is blocked) from that of the star and planet together prior to eclipse, thus isolating the emission of the planet and making possible a chemical analysis of its day-side atmosphere.

Swain uses the eclipse of the planet behind the star to probe the planet's dayside, which contains the hottest portions of its atmosphere. "We're starting to find the molecules and to figure out how many there are to see the changes between the day side and the night side," Swain said.

This successful demonstration of looking at near-infrared light emitted from a planet is encouraging for astronomers planning to use NASA's James Webb Space Telescope when it is launched in 2013. These biomarkers are best seen at near-infrared wavelengths.

Astronomers look forward to using the Webb telescope to spectroscopically look for biomarkers on a terrestrial planet the size of Earth or a super-Earth several times our planet's mass. "The Webb telescope should be able to make much more sensitive measurements of these primary and secondary eclipse events," Swain said.

Swain next plans to search for molecules in the atmospheres of other exoplanets and try to increase the number of molecules detected in exoplanet atmospheres. He also plans to use molecules to study changes that may be present in exoplanet atmospheres to learn something about the weather on these distant worlds.